Phoenix Suns head coach Mike D'Antoni is presented the Red Auerbach Trophy as the NBA Coach of the Year for the 2004-2005 season by Suns President and GM Bryan Colangelo in 2005.(Photo: Rob Schumacher/azcentral sports)

If you have anywhere between one to five Twitter accounts, you likely saw The Ringer's story Tuesday night that speculated that Bryan Colangelo, the Philadelphia 76ers' president of basketball operations, may have one to five burner accounts which he may have used to anonymously tweet about players, coaching staff and the media.

Colangelo is a former general manager of the Suns and the son of sports mogul Jerry Colangelo, who rose through the NBA ranks and took over for the Sixers in April 2016.

In a thorough investigation, The Ringer provided the information they received about accounts that seem to be linked to Colangelo tweeting throughout his time in Philadelphia.

Though the story dropped late on the East Coast, the reaction on Twitter was swift and snowballed all night. Burner accounts and Twitter slip-ups are not new to the NBA, but the depth of the Colangelo story, paired with him being the team's president, made this case even more bizarre.

But jokes, memes and eight-minute-long parody songs aside, other Twitter users began to build off of The Ringer's report. Though crowd-sourcing, users began to stockpile more circumstantial evidence that the accounts were linked, possibly even tying in Colangelo's wife.

Sorry, Bryan. Got you.

Went to “reset password” and tried three of his burners. Every single one has a phone number ending in 91. This is clearly not a coincidence.